How Would You Like to Get a 226% Increase in Sales Conversions?

Find simple and inexpensive ways to increase conversion
dramatically with the traffic that you already have.

My friend Terry Dean, one of the best online marketers around, focuses on conversion techniques for all of his coaching clients.

And one of his favorite sayings is, “You don’t have a traffic problem; you have a conversion problem.”

Of course, without any traffic at all, conversions don’t matter.

But if you have even a little bit of traffic, and you want to increase your conversions dramatically, the fastest and easiest wayis to add scarcity to your offer.

But there are dangers in using scarcity incorrectly.

In fact, it could backfire on you completely. But done well, scarcity can be a beautiful thing.

In a few minutes, we’ll look at a test by a clothing retailer that resulted in 226 percent increase in ROI.

Time limited offers have worked in every industry for centuries
If you’ve ever used coupons, bought a car on sale, gone to the Macy’s one-day sale, bid on any eBay auction, then you’ve been affected by time-limited marketing.

They all do it. And they do it because it works so well.

Case Study #1

Yaro Starak, a well-known online marketer, says,

"It became apparent that during a complete online launch process with a time based deadline (usually closing down of the offer, or a hefty price increase after deadline), that in the last 24 hours the total number of sales would increase by at minimum 50%, and could even double…

For example, if a product was ‘open’ for a week, and during the first 6 days I made 100 sales, then within the last 24 hours I’d make anywhere from 50 to 100 more sales.

This happened every single time."

And He's Not Alone

Glance through JVZoo or any other online marketplace and you’ll see all forms of scarcity including:

Time limited offers with countdown timers (“tick-tock”)

Limited ‘in-stock’ availability (“only 3 more in stock”)

Seasonal offers (“Pumpkin Spice Latte available until Jan. 1”)

Limited production (“only 100 will be printed”)

Quantity limited (“only 19 left at this price”)

Free shipping offers (“free shipping if you purchase the next 20 minutes”)

Expiring coupons (“coupon expires on 4/1”)

Customer behavior (“1003 liked this product too”)

Limited production (“only 100 will be printed”)

The Fear of Missing Out

According to psychologists, scarcity actually creates a mini-crisis for someone and it focuses the viewer on taking action to alieve the condition.

They know if they don’t act now, they may lose out on a deal.

And it turns out that losing out, the Fear of Missing Out or FOMO, is the driving emotional factor behind most purchases.
In fact, researchers have shown that FOMO is twice as likely to drive sales as an opportunity to seek pleasure.

Scarcity increases customer desire because it forces action. You can’t really be a fence sitter if the product is not going to be available tomorrow.

The Elements of an Irresistible Offer

What does Terry Dean have to say about it?

In his Golden Glove, a marketing device which highlights the five elements of an irresistible offer, Terry Dean adds scarcity as the fifth and possibly the most important of the elements calling simply: Reason to act now.

Without a reason to act now, people don’t have to take any action.

And they don’t.

If someone buys a product from you without scarcity, it means they have a desperate problem and need a solution right now, no matter what the price is.

What about price? Is price always the trigger in scarcity ploys?

No, there are many ways to INCREASE price because of scarcity.

We Can All Take A Lesson From Apple

When the iPhone first came out, Steve Jobs understood and used scarcity to maintain a premium price.

I knew the person at AT&T really well who managed the iPhone launch.

She dealt directly with Jobs. AT&T had the exclusive (another form of scarcity) contract to sell the first iPhone.

The launch date of the iPhone was months away, but set in stone because they had to leak it, then meet it to build anticipation. The company began taking pre-orders.

I don’t remember the exact numbers, but let’s say that Apple was releasing only 1 million phones on launch day.

Pre-orders were many times that number.

Of course they could have. But the lines at the front door would have been shorter and no one would have spent the night in a tent on the sidewalk to make sure that they got the first iPhone.

Early adopters are the best friend of the scarcity tactic because they become the new evangelists with the coolest tools.

Apple was able to maintain that position for many years with every new launch. People that say launches don’t work should study Apple – they’ve mastered the launch.

And let’s talk about that launch date.

Launch dates build anticipation that result from a countdown.

And a countdown timer is shorthandto your brain that this is urgent.

And as we’ve said, our brain has a hard-wired response to urgent feelings, especially if we think we’re going to lose something, even if the loss is just an opportunity to get something.

In fact, scarcity actually makes people feel like something is more valuable – even when it’s not.

Case Study #2

What does a world class violinist have to do with this?

Let’s talk about Joshua Bell.

He’s a world-class, high-priced concert violinist. People stand in line for days to pay hundreds of dollars for tickets to see him perform in major halls across the world.

As an experiment to see how people valued his music outside the concert hall, he decided to play a free, unannounced concert in the Washington, DC subway. That's him in the 2-minute video at the right.

Imagine that you walk into the station and hear this beautiful violin music coming from an ordinary man dressed in casual clothes.

There’s no sign, no press crew, no indication in any way that this man is special.

People ignored him, until one woman at the end recognized him and said she'd seen him play at "The Library of Congress..."

He is one of the most gifted and respected violinists in the world. This performance was free. People on the subway did not “value” him as much as when they paid for tickets in Carnegie Hall.

But the music was the same.

In the subway, Joshua Bell’s music was not scarce.

In the concert hall, it is. And the perceived value was in the concert hall, not in the common subway station.

So, what exactly is scarcity?

Or perhaps my mother had nailed it when she said, “If I had a pile of dog poop, you’d want one too!”

Science of the brain tells us she was right.

If you’ve got it, I want it. If I’ve already got it, you can have it.

Christmas morning is a great example. Kids often abandoned the race car or Barbie doll that they’d insisted they absolutely had to have because they saw something else under the tree.

That reaction is hard-wired in us.

Our brain releases measurable chemicals when we think we’re going to miss out on something.

The more difficult it is to acquire something the more value that thing has.

Rolls Royce automobiles are incredibly difficult to get. There’s a long waiting list.

But if you offer me free shipping in the next 20 minutes, my brain gets just as lit up as if I’d been put on the waiting list for a Rolls.

Why resist it?

So, for years, I stuck my nose in the air and said, “I won’t use deadlines and scarcity gimmicks in my marketing. That’s ridiculous!”

Boy, was I wrong.

If you want to sell something, you have to add a deadline.

But if you overdue it, then people don’t believe you. That’s why when we build the Simple Conversion Commander plugin, we did so with the requirement that it manage marketing campaigns so that an offer was gone when it said it was gone.

That’s just keeping your integrity tidied up.

But the other benefit is that it helps train your people to pay attention. If you say it’s gone at midnight ET, then it should be gone at midnight ET. Not PT, or MT, but ET.

Then, the next time a promotion runs and it says midnight ET, folks will know. After midnight and you’ll lose out.

Case Study #3

Remember that 226 percent ROI increase?

That came about with one little change to an online ecommerce page where a Dutch retailer was selling a suede jacket. The results are below.

Look closely and you'll see one little thing that makes all the difference in the world.Yep, it's the scarcity element.

The test was very simple.

The first listing, call it Test A, was exactly the same without the scarcity element.

The second listing, Test B, added the inline text timer to off next day delivery. It doesn't even offer "Free" next day. It just says to order before the timer goes down and you'll get it next day.

That simple change - adding a scarcity element with a timer - resulted in a 226 percent revenue increase on that listing.

That's powerful!

Over the two-week test, the conversions went from 3% (on the page without the timer) to nearly 7 % regularly with nearly 50,000 visitors. All day long!

The timer had a major (and predictable) impact according to the website WhichTestWon.com.

If you add time-limited scarcity in a strategic way, your results could be similar.

Finally, there's an app for that...

Managing your marketing campaigns to include scarcity is truly a mechanical
process. It’s a set-it-and-forget-it affair. Or at least, it should be.

I’ve stayed up many nights to change the price on a page.

Or close down an offer.

Or redirect a page to a new page.

And it’s a pain to do that.

The Simple Conversion Commander is the tool that does just that. It’s a WordPress plugin, but works with raw code for non WordPress sites.